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The Laughing Sutra (Vintage Contemporaries)

The Laughing Sutra (Vintage Contemporaries)

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It laughs at you!
Review: Fabulous

I read the laughing Sutra for a Buddhist literature course in College. I read the book in one sitting. I found myself engrossed by the cultural representation, rich characters and underlining theme.

What other readers found as an odd or anticlimactic ending, I found to tie the entire story together. The end drove home the ultimate theme of the story. You must experience and live the culture to truly understand, not merely read or study it. I felt that this was a wonderful slap in the face to all the American pseudo Buddhist converts. The books pocks fun at people whom become inspired by reading a little Buddhist literature and then declare themselves Buddhists. What a joke. They can never truly understand Buddhism from an American cultural standpoint.

This makes me laugh... The laughing Sutra clearly drove this point home.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful story
Review: I am not an avid reader of books. I often put a book away before even getting to the crux of the story. The Laughing Sutra had me enthralled and mesmorised from beginning to end. I felt a sense of loss when I had finished my `travels' with Hsun-Ching and Colonel Sung, and found it difficult to accept the fact that I have come to the end of their story.

I want to know what Colonel Sung, who is my hero in the story, will be doing next. I can easily say that Mark Salzman is my current favourite author and I am looking out for more of his writings.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mark Salzman
Review: I have loved all of Mark Salzman's books...in fact, I own all of them, including his movie of Iron and Silk. I find his writing very down to earth and witty and funny without pretention.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful wonderful book!
Review: I have read this book twice, once in high school and another just recently. This novel is a similar story to "Journey to the West," talking about a monk who goes on a pilgrimage with his disciples to find the teachings of Buddha, only that this novel takes place in slightly modern times. Salzman has creatively re-invented the story with much enthusiasm and humor.

I have recommended this book to many of my friends and all of them have enjoyed reading it. For younger readers, I think they should read it a second time later on in their lives to get a better understanding of the book. (I understood it better after my second reading.)

To conclude this, Salzman is a wonderful and talented writer. I have just recently purchased more of his books and can't wait till I dive into those stories!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful story
Review: I loved this book. As I was reading it, I kept exclaiming to my family about how wonderful it was, and when I finished it I repeatedly told them that somebody ought to read it. My teenage daughter took my advice yesterday, and she polished it off that same day to her delight. She said that she was sad to have finished it. The story starts off a little slowly, setting the scene. The early chapters have resonance and insight, but they don't really hint at the hilarious adventures to come. Hsun-ching is a charming character, quiet and intelligent, but you are likely to be completely enthralled by Colonel Sun. Once this pair is on their way to America in search of the Laughing Sutra you will have a hard time putting the book down until you are done. I have read a couple of Mark Salzman's other books, and each is extremely well written, displaying a fascination with character, a core of spirituality, and moving, insightful situations; I plan to work my way through his other books, because it's been a while since I've found a writer I enjoyed so much. But for sheer fun, compelling characters and emotional involvement, you couldn't do better than The Laughing Sutra.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book for all Ages
Review: I'm a 15 year old sophmore at a private school in Texas. I was required to read this book for a summer reading project. Normally the summer reading books are boring books that no student has intrest in. The Laughing Sutra, on the other hand, is a GREAT book. It has romance, adventure, suspense, and comedy all packed in to a wonderful story. I even laughed out loud at this book. I would recomend this book for anyone willing to have a fun, peaceful time. Another good characteristic of this book is that it reads quickly and is never thought of as a long boring book while reading. I hope others enjoy this book as much as I did

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the Best Books Ever!
Review: Over Christmas break I made a return trip to China and brought with me a copy of Mark Salzman's Laughing Sutra.

Salzman's Iron and Silk, though a bit dated, is one of the best books on visiting China. It is a wonderful read, a great teaching tool, and just simply a great book.

I had tried reading the Laughing Sutra a number of times and never got past the first chapter. However, during a 5 hour train ride between Beijing and Chengde China I gave the book another shot.

The first chapter is tough, but once you get past it this book is wonderful. It is funny, intelligent, clever, and a great history of China.

Salzman in brilliant fashion tells the story of Journey to the West, the Monkey King, Three Kingdoms, and the cultural revolution. This book is so creative and so brilliant.

Once past the first chapter I read the book in two days. It was an awesome literary experience.

My one warning is that you have to know a decent amount about China and Chinese history and literature to get the full effect of this book. Anyone who enjoys reading about China will eat this book up.

I cannot say enough goods things about this book.

READ IT!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: interesting concept, not much else
Review: The idea of the novel was the only thing that kept me going through the length of it. Personally, I was disappointed with the writing, which was sparse (thoroughly lacking in detail), almost to the point of being childish. The running joke throughout is a tired one: a foreign country boy dopily wondering at the amazing modern technology of our obviously more civilized and advanced society. Funny, at first, but it grows old quickly, along with the story in general. In all, a very unimpressive, strangely moralistic work that was kind of offensive for me as an Asian.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Who's the stranger, and where's the strange land?
Review: The Laughing Sutra, although fiction, is the perfect counterpoint to Iron & Silk. Salzman is the main figure in Iron & Silk, showing the cultural differences between the American and Chinese through his viewpoint. In The Laughing Sutra, he is able to turn the tables and present these differences from the viewpoints of a modern Chinese and an ancient Chinese (Salzman's language speciality was classical Chinese, which is to modern Mandarin what Latin is to Italian). The story line may be a quest, but it is a quest under a different sort of rules than American fantasy. Here, the quest is one of duty, one of loyalty. Here, the heroes are brave yet unsure, truly innocents abroad. The immortal Monkey King is the only 'fantastic' thing about the book, but the viewpoints are so much more different than our own that the entire world seems strange, even when they reach San Francisco.

I once recommended Tim Powers' On Stranger Tides and A.A. Attanasio's Wyvern for being two sides of the same coin. In these novels of piracy on the Carribbean, Powers had taken real history and grafted on fantasy elements, while Attanasio had taken fantasy and made it seem real. And so are Barry Hughart and Mark Salzman fellows of a coin too. Hughart takes folklore that is alien to us and explains it to us in terms we can understand, while Salzman (in The Laughing Sutra) has taken a portion of reality, and used it to make our world seem alien.

In science fiction, we make much ado about our aliens, but I think Salzman knows the real story: we are our own best aliens.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Who's the stranger, and where's the strange land?
Review: The Laughing Sutra, although fiction, is the perfect counterpoint to Iron & Silk. Salzman is the main figure in Iron & Silk, showing the cultural differences between the American and Chinese through his viewpoint. In The Laughing Sutra, he is able to turn the tables and present these differences from the viewpoints of a modern Chinese and an ancient Chinese (Salzman's language speciality was classical Chinese, which is to modern Mandarin what Latin is to Italian). The story line may be a quest, but it is a quest under a different sort of rules than American fantasy. Here, the quest is one of duty, one of loyalty. Here, the heroes are brave yet unsure, truly innocents abroad. The immortal Monkey King is the only 'fantastic' thing about the book, but the viewpoints are so much more different than our own that the entire world seems strange, even when they reach San Francisco.

I once recommended Tim Powers' On Stranger Tides and A.A. Attanasio's Wyvern for being two sides of the same coin. In these novels of piracy on the Carribbean, Powers had taken real history and grafted on fantasy elements, while Attanasio had taken fantasy and made it seem real. And so are Barry Hughart and Mark Salzman fellows of a coin too. Hughart takes folklore that is alien to us and explains it to us in terms we can understand, while Salzman (in The Laughing Sutra) has taken a portion of reality, and used it to make our world seem alien.

In science fiction, we make much ado about our aliens, but I think Salzman knows the real story: we are our own best aliens.


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